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Arizona’s Panic Over Critical Race Theory Reaches New Heights

The Arizona Department of Education recently launched a CRT hotline. We wish we were kidding.

The panic over critical race theoryย is at an all-time high in one of the most likely places on earth, Arizona. The Arizona Department of Education launched aย hotline last week for people to report any lessons that use โ€œcritical race theory.โ€

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Weโ€™re putting โ€œcritical race theoryโ€ in quotes above because, as people have explained time and time again, critical race theory (CRT) is not being taught in K-12 schools. For anyone needing a little refresher, CRT is a college-level framework acknowledging that racism is deeply embedded in our legal system and policies.ย 

CRT rant aside, what does the hotline actually do? According to the DOEโ€™s website, constituents should report any teaching that focuses on โ€œrace or ethnicity, rather than individuals and merit, promoting gender ideology, social-emotional learning, or inappropriate sexual content.โ€

The initiative comes from Arizona Republican Superintendent of Public Instruction Tom Horne, who made his fight against CRT the linchpin of his campaign.

โ€œRace is irrelevant to anything. Critical race theory teaches the opposite, that race is primary. They divide students into โ€˜oppressorsโ€™ and โ€˜oppressedโ€™ based on what race they were born into, which is irrational,โ€ said Horne in a statement.

The idea that race is โ€œirrelevantโ€ in the United States flies in the face of pretty much everything we know. (Here are justย a few examplesย of how wrongย that statementย is in thisย country).

But besides the data that kids could benefit from learning a thing or two about racism, this a massive waste of time. In Virginia, Republican Governor Glenn Youngkin had to shut down his CRT hotline because too few people sent in tips.

โ€œThe help education email was deactivated in September, as it had received little to no volume during that time,โ€ Macaulay Porter, a spokesperson for Gov. Youngkin, said in a statement to Business Insider.

The CRT panic isnโ€™t isolated to Virginia, Arizona, and Florida. At least 44 states have introduced bills that restrict teaching critical race theory or limit how teachers can talk about racism and sexism, according to Education Week.

Chances are high that Arizonaโ€™s CRT hotline will go down in flames like Virginiaโ€™s, but in the meantime, it doesnโ€™t look like anti-CRT mania is going away anytime soon.

Straight From The Root

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